Reports coming from Maiduguri, the Borno state capital,
indicate that residents are fleeing the town in fear of attacks from the
terrorist sect, Boko Haram.
The Nation learned on Friday from fleeing residents that the terrorists had surrounded the city in preparation for a fresh attack, a development that has led to heavy traffic on the Damaturu/Kano/Bauchi/Jos highway which is the only safe route in and out of the city.
Aisha Abdullahi, a resident of Damaturu in neighbouring Yobe State, said she almost called off her official trip to Maiduguri on Friday on seeing the large number of cars leaving the city.
“I almost turned back looking at the way people were leaving the town.I just don’t know where the courage to continue the journey came from. I prayed all through it,” she said.
Another resident, Usman Kakami Bulama, who said he had moved his seven children to Kano State, said that Maiduguri residents have not been sleeping well since President Goodluck Jonathan’s recent campaign visit to the state.
“I have become worried just like many other people in Maiduguri. The city has not had this kind of threat of recent until the president came here and left last Saturday. We don’t sleep with our eyes closed any longer and the tension is growing stronger every day. I have never moved my family anywhere since this problem started but I am afraid that this time around something dangerous will happen. It is better for my family to leave and I stay alone than all of us staying here. It does not make sense though its painful and the cost implication is also there,” Bulama said.
He added that hundreds of people had stormed motor parks on the Damaturu/Kano road on their way out of the city, adding that many of them insisted they would return after the February general elections.
Augustina Andrew, who was travelling to the south east with her two children, said: “if Nigeria is alive after May 29, 2015, I will come back, otherwise, it is bye bye to Maiduguri.”
However, another resident Abaganna Yunusa scorned the threat to Maiduguri from Boko Haram, saying:“Let them come inside Maiduguri, they will see fire. The day they enter Maiduguri will be their last day. We are going to kill all of them. Enough is enough. We are tired of them.”
Meanwhile, efforts to obtain a reaction from the Nigerian army proved unsuccessful, as the military authorities remained silent about the feared attack.
But it was observed that commercial activities are still ongoing in the metropolis, with banks and schools, both private and public, still operating.
The magazine Newsweek on Friday quoted John Campbell, former US ambassador to Nigeria and editor of the Nigeria Security Tracker, a tool that monitors violence in the country, as saying: “In terms of the encirclement of Maiduguri, we try to track the villages that Boko Haram occupies around Maiduguri and indeed it looks like a noose.”
Boko Haram launched a series of offensives on the city last week, attacks that coincided with the visit of US secretary of state John Kerry to the commercial hub of Nigeria, Lagos State, to meet with the two leading presidential candidates, President Goodluck Jonathan and General Muhammadu Buhari (Rtd).
It will be recalled that Chad military forces reportedly reclaimed the Nigerian town of Malam Fatori, Borno State, from Boko Haram insurgents.
Meanwhile, the Borno State government has established a committee to distribute 432 free apartments in the Yerwa Peace Estate, Maiduguri, to residents of Bula-Bulim Ngarnam who were victims of the recent insurgency attacks.
The Nation learned on Friday from fleeing residents that the terrorists had surrounded the city in preparation for a fresh attack, a development that has led to heavy traffic on the Damaturu/Kano/Bauchi/Jos highway which is the only safe route in and out of the city.
Aisha Abdullahi, a resident of Damaturu in neighbouring Yobe State, said she almost called off her official trip to Maiduguri on Friday on seeing the large number of cars leaving the city.
“I almost turned back looking at the way people were leaving the town.I just don’t know where the courage to continue the journey came from. I prayed all through it,” she said.
Another resident, Usman Kakami Bulama, who said he had moved his seven children to Kano State, said that Maiduguri residents have not been sleeping well since President Goodluck Jonathan’s recent campaign visit to the state.
“I have become worried just like many other people in Maiduguri. The city has not had this kind of threat of recent until the president came here and left last Saturday. We don’t sleep with our eyes closed any longer and the tension is growing stronger every day. I have never moved my family anywhere since this problem started but I am afraid that this time around something dangerous will happen. It is better for my family to leave and I stay alone than all of us staying here. It does not make sense though its painful and the cost implication is also there,” Bulama said.
He added that hundreds of people had stormed motor parks on the Damaturu/Kano road on their way out of the city, adding that many of them insisted they would return after the February general elections.
Augustina Andrew, who was travelling to the south east with her two children, said: “if Nigeria is alive after May 29, 2015, I will come back, otherwise, it is bye bye to Maiduguri.”
However, another resident Abaganna Yunusa scorned the threat to Maiduguri from Boko Haram, saying:“Let them come inside Maiduguri, they will see fire. The day they enter Maiduguri will be their last day. We are going to kill all of them. Enough is enough. We are tired of them.”
Meanwhile, efforts to obtain a reaction from the Nigerian army proved unsuccessful, as the military authorities remained silent about the feared attack.
But it was observed that commercial activities are still ongoing in the metropolis, with banks and schools, both private and public, still operating.
The magazine Newsweek on Friday quoted John Campbell, former US ambassador to Nigeria and editor of the Nigeria Security Tracker, a tool that monitors violence in the country, as saying: “In terms of the encirclement of Maiduguri, we try to track the villages that Boko Haram occupies around Maiduguri and indeed it looks like a noose.”
Boko Haram launched a series of offensives on the city last week, attacks that coincided with the visit of US secretary of state John Kerry to the commercial hub of Nigeria, Lagos State, to meet with the two leading presidential candidates, President Goodluck Jonathan and General Muhammadu Buhari (Rtd).
It will be recalled that Chad military forces reportedly reclaimed the Nigerian town of Malam Fatori, Borno State, from Boko Haram insurgents.
Meanwhile, the Borno State government has established a committee to distribute 432 free apartments in the Yerwa Peace Estate, Maiduguri, to residents of Bula-Bulim Ngarnam who were victims of the recent insurgency attacks.
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